The actual phrase is "a bad apple spoils the bunch".No need to punish all developers because of few bad apples.
Proclaiming it is just "of few bad apples" doen't actually prevent a tragedy of the commons from ruining it for everyone.
The actual phrase is "a bad apple spoils the bunch".No need to punish all developers because of few bad apples.
and you should expect no returns from it.
True, but discussing a very simple agreement about this at the time of commissioning could save pages of posts whinging about it in hindsight![]()
Slapping a warning on the resource would help in extreme cases.To what end? What are we supposed to do if we find an add-on that is having issues?
Not really. I did as you describe (check reviews & recent discussion) with Waindigo Friends and even funded development after which it turned out that somewhere hidden in hundreds of replies there was a bug report for killer queries which made it unusable on a live big board. That's just one example. You are right that in many cases it is possible to see that there are issues by looking at the last 2 pages. But if there are no significant issues there, then that surely doesn't mean the addon is solid. We only know after finding and reading each and every bug report in the resource discussion.All the signals are there. At minimum if you check the reviews, check the add-on doesn't have an "Unmaintained" prefix and check the most recent discussion messages then it's obvious if there's a problem.
Who would determine confirmed bug reports? Users or the Author? What if the add-on is abandoned (or in limbo)?Though I think that having unresolved bug reports clearly visible on the main resource page would be much better.
Users submit reports or confirm they experience the same bug. Resource authors determine what is a confirmed bug report and what is not a bug.Who would determine confirmed bug reports? Users or the Author? What if the add-on is abandoned (or in limbo)?
Registration generally happens after one decides to purchase. Bug trackers for publicly available products should always be publicly visible to unregistered users.sorry if you have to register on a few sites.
Have you considered asking this question directly to your addon's developer?One concern I have is with xf 2 coming, is major addon authors updating their products. The problem is if I'm forced to remove a significant feature because the major addon hasn't been updated to work with new versions. Simple addons don't have this problem as in general someone else can remake them if necessary. But the major addons are not so easy to deal with in this regard
Have you considered asking this question directly to your addon's developer?
The one thing that scares me is I'm willing to come in at a decent price and start churning out real work and charge backs are enough to run me off. The customers are worse than some of the developers.
You don't even want to know what my time is actually worth. I'm unqualified and unemployable in my field. Just came into it out of fast food. I do less work than these McDonald's employees you probably complain about wanting 15 an hour and I get paid more for it. A company is charged $120 the moment I put my car in gear, even if you tell me to turn around. My work can be as simple as plugging monitors in. I've had customers ask for me personally and contractors fight over who I'm going to work for. So when I think about what a qualified employee is worth...
So when I want to charge $5 after spending 8 hours testing, documenting and packaging a template mod that takes 30 minutes to develop, there shouldn't be a problem. Not to mention on going support.
How? Chargebacks wouldn't magically disappear. Third party can only make illusion of chargebacks disappearing by covering expenses from their cut. However all developers will have to give cut of their earnings to third party. There is nothing good about that suggestion.Which is a good argument for sales to be run through xf. I wonder how many good developers don't bother to make great addons because of things like this
How? Chargebacks wouldn't magically disappear. Third party can only make illusion of chargebacks disappearing by covering expenses from their cut. However all developers will have to give cut of their earnings to third party. There is nothing good about that suggestion.
Current system works fine. The only thing that I think can be improved is reviews/feedback system, that would encourage customers to leave reviews.
No need to force unwanted services on developers. It won't solve any problems.
I've experienced only 2-3 such chargebacks in many years. Last one was just few months ago from rather active user on this forum, who claimed that he made a "mistake" (you don't open dispute claiming that card was stolen by mistake), after which he asked if he can purchase again. That happens. But its not an issue at all.Because you can make it so on the third chargeback (for example) that the user can no longer purchase at all. That will stop serial charge backers.
Problem with that is if it becomes too attractive, it would become preferred method of purchase for customers. Then by not using it sellers will loose customers. Then it becomes a choice between losing customers and losing money. Nether of those options are good.The other thing is, you don't have to force this on developers, just make it an attractive option.
It's ultimately a case of buyer beware.
All the signals are there.
It certainly doesn't, it reflects on the developer. Though I can see where it is easy to twist the truth to make Xenforo out to be the bad guy.Every resource sold for Xenforo customers reflects on Xenforo
What do you suggest? Have Xenforo ban all 3rd party developers from posting here? As @Chris D said "It's ultimately a case of buyer beware."and Xenforo may not want to promote the idea their brand is something to be wary of.
I can see this happening for those who believe the propaganda being promoted here.Most people will not complain and instead, just drift away.
Xenforo is not responsible for the unfounded allegations directed at them any more than if there were 5 pages of accusations leveled at you for being responsible for 3 rd party developers and demanding YOU do something about it.In the meantime, here's a 5-page thread asking the Xenforo team to re-consider how they approach the issue of resources, in order to make it better at protecting your paying customers and developers alike. Is that signal enough?
What do you suggest? Have Xenforo ban all 3rd party developers from posting here? As @Chris D said "It's ultimately a case of buyer beware
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